The Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee and the 'Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide' Campaign would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to all those who contributed
to the success of this year's Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March.

Your contribution leading up to the March and on the day of the March is sincerely noted and appreciated. Your contributions have come in many forms, big and small, and we recognise them all. In
particular, those who volunteered: security, stewards, first aiders; those who did outreach and collected signatures for the petition, those who donated funds, those who promoted and publicised the
March, those who participated in shaping and improving the March through your feed-forward and constructive criticisms, those who travelled from far and near to join us for the March, our
international delegations, and representatives, all special guest speakers, our regional representatives, all those who were on the programme and who shared with us info about the works they are
engaged in to 'be the change' and all those who contributed to telling a people's 'Ourstory' of the March through your placards, banners and slogans and those who provided transport for community
members or provided refreshments and vital equipment.

We urge all protesters, campaigners, contributors, allies and advocates to continue to keep the fire of Reparatory Justice burning 365/24-7. We are going from strength to strength and must
continue to envision the success of a Re-paired-Nation and the steps we need to take towards this such as those expressed in the 'Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide' Petition and it's
wider campaign. Medase Pa, Asante Sana and bountiful thanks to you all.

Join us as we look to our 2019 programme to fulfil our missions. Stay in touch: reparationsmarch.org stopthemaangamizi.com

Welcome to our website!

We hope you gain a fuller ovastanding about the purpose of the march, what we seek for our people and how you can get involved in the process. Please share with your friends and get them to
sign the petition on https://www.change.org/p/stop-the-maangamizi-we-charge-genocide-ecocide

Watch This Video to learn the Rationale for the Reparations March

Why We March on 1st August:

The Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee formed in 2015 continues to build on work of the organisers of the first Reparations March RMUK and other supporting organisations on 1st
August 2014 after such organisers decided that would be a one-off event. Various community members and their constituencies at the time insisted that they wanted to March to continue the efforts that
had been made to more visably bring to public consciousness awareness of a Reparations Movement.

The 1st of August was originally chosen as the day of the Reparations March because it is the officially recognised ‘Emancipation Day’, marking the passing of the Act for the Abolition of slavery
throughout the British Colonies; for promoting the industry of the manumitted slaves; and for compensating the persons hitherto entitled to the service of such slaves (also known as the Slavery
Abolition Act) on 1 August 1833 and took effect 1 August 1834. The significance of this date in history is that it is the date that after all the years of resistance by chattelised Afrikans, torn
away from our Motherland, Britain and its fellow European enslavers of Afrikan people were compelled to recognise that they could no longer continue to enslave us without severe consequences. It
therefore represents a symbolic day recognising our refusal to accept enslavement, in every manner, including its present-day manifestations and to remind ourselves of the need for our true
emancipation which will not occur without holistic Reparatory Justice.

Contrary to popular belief, however, the Slavery Abolition Act did not free Afrikans who were then unjustly considered to be the legal property of Britain’s enslaving class. In fact, the act
contained a provision for £20 million financial compensation to the enslavers, by the British taxpayer, for the loss of their so-called “property”. That sum represented 40% of the total government
expenditure for 1834, the modern equivalent of between £16bn and £17bn and represented the largest bailout in British history until the bailout of the banks in 2009. It was the British Houses of
Parliament, which in this unjust piece of legislation, upheld the notion that the Afrikan enslaved and their descendants were not human, but property and determined that our people in the Caribbean
were assessed as having a market value of £47 million.

The British Parliament also determined that enslaved Afrikans in British colonies would receive nothing. Instead they were forced, through the provision of this unjust law, to pay the remaining £27
million costs for their so-called emancipation by providing 45 hours of unpaid labour each week for their former ‘masters’, for a further four years after the passing of the Abolition Act. Clearly,
the British state cemented this legalised form of injustice by forcing the enslaved to pay part of the costs for their legalised ‘manumission’. It was recently discovered that up until 2015 our
people and other members of the British public were paying taxes which went into paying off the ‘debt’ that was incurred by the British Government as a result of compensating European enslavers with
the passing of the Slavery Abolition Act.

Fast forward to the contemporary era, the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March has aims and are the reasons why we march on 1st August. Please visit www.reparationsmarch.org to familiarise yourself with the aims.

The March is supposed to be a culmination of the work that people are engaged in all-year round on reparations which is represented in the messages and banners for the March and show of strength but
unfortunately it is still seen as a one-day event with no attention paid to reparations/activism the other 364 days of the year. The 1st August allows us to tie in and reclaim a day popularly known
and commemorated as ‘Emancipation Day’ and reclaim it as a ‘Reparations Day’ which enables our people also living in 'former British colonies ' to engage with it too.

Many former colonies have 1st August as a public holiday as granted by their governments, often on the basis of activists on the ground who feel it is importance to commemorate the struggles of our
Ancestors for emancipation. The Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee (AEDRMC) is not advocating a state granted public holiday and feel there is more power in disruption in London to
state agencies and the economy as well as the increase in visibility to international tourists during the holiday season. We do not advocate state recognition of a day where they will as they always
do, redefine the narrative, hijack and take credit for the day! Please note that the petition gets same response whether MPs are sitting or not. The disruption to London happens whether MPs are
there or not! Please also note the Campaign partner of the March, the ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide! Campaign’ has other campaign tools which it is utilising 365/24-7 and has
developed tools and lobbying guidance that supporters can use ALL YEAR ROUND. So please let's focus on the wider picture of the milestones we seek (contained in the petition) and in this way
recognise that MPs being in recess on 1st August is really not a big deal - for the above stated reasons. Let us now consider how we are going to move forward towards our goals through our own
contributions to Reparatory Justice activism.

We in the AEDRMC emphasize that the March is not the whole Reparations Movement, but only an aspect of it in terms of a street protest that happens annually. it is important that other initiatives
that other groups, organisations and individuals in the Afrikan Heritage Community are showcased on the 1st August as stipulated in one of the aims of the March; hence why we have chosen the theme
NOTHING ABOUT US WITHOUT US: ACTUALISING THE REPARATORY JUSTICE CHANGE WE ENVISAGE for this year’s theme.

The challenge is being put to our people to bring forth and promote the work they have been doing on reparations all year round. It is easy to see the inadequacies in what other people do but far
more transformative when we ourselves focus on the change that we are making, individually and collectively.
The Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee.

These are the panels of the
informative flyer for the Reparations March on the 1st of August.

The Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to all
of you who took part in the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March on 1st Moziah (August) 2017, THE flagship event of the Afrikan heritage community supported by the Stop the Maangamizi Campaign.
We would like to thank:

All those who marched

All those who volunteered on the day

The artists, the speakers, the stewards and the practitioners operating in the healing
zone on Windrush Sq

The UK regions who mobilised and
attended

Our allies (local and International) with whom we have been
working with throughout the year

All who donated money or items in kind

Our grassroots media who continue to profile our
cause

The silent activists, workers and
supporters

And the Divine force of the Universe and the spirits of our
Indomitable Ancestors whose shoulders we attempt to stand on.

We thank you all for contributing to this mass show of strength and determination- not just to the State but to
each other as we commit to do all we can to STOP THE MAANGAMIZI!

Needless to say the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March is an important day of disruption,
protest, challenge and for us, a contribution to our education, awareness and self repair. BUT IT IS JUST ONE DAY! We must not lose momentum! We have another 364 days to progress the aims of the Stop
the Maangamizi Campaign and other Reparatory Justice activities that we are all involved in.

Visits our websites to find out how you can contribute to our quest to secure holistic Reparations. Find
out how you and your family can prepare to contribute to the demands within the Stop the Maangamizi We Charge Genocide/Ecocide Petition:

'BE IT RESOLVED THAT THE REPARATIONS MARCH, AS A FORM OF REPARATORY JUSTICE STREET PROTEST,
IS BEING MADE IINADEQUATE DUE TO INACTIVITY BY THE MAJORITY OF ITS PARTICIPANTS IN TAKING STEPS TO ADVANCE THE CAMPAIGN FOR REPARATIONS BETWEEN THE ANNUAL MARCHES'

Come and have your say! Frame your arguments for OR against the motion! Stop hiding behind WhatsApp!!